Correction: Ex-Stanford Swimmer Rape story

FILE- In this June 10, 2016, file photo, Stanford law professor Michele Dauber speaks at a rally in San Francisco. A woman sexually assaulted by a former Stanford swimmer outside a campus fraternity party will no longer participate in the creation of a plaque after the university rejected her suggestions for a quote marking the place where she was attacked. Dauber, who publicly represents the victim who wishes to remain anonymous, said that the university rejected quotes for the plaque from the statement the victim read during the January 2016 sentencing of Brock Turner. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — In a story Jan. 29 about a sexual assault victim deciding not to participate in the creation of a plaque marking where she was attacked on the Stanford University campus, The Associated Press reported erroneously when her assaulter was sentenced. Santa Clara County Judge Aaron Persky sentenced Brock Turner in June 2016, not in January 2016.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Victim of ex-Stanford swimmer won’t participate in memorial

A woman sexually assaulted by a former Stanford swimmer outside a campus fraternity party will no longer participate in the creation of a plaque after the university rejected her suggestions for a quote marking the place where she was attacked

JANIE HAR

Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A woman sexually assaulted by a then-Stanford University swimmer outside a campus fraternity party will no longer participate in the creation of a memorial plaque after the university rejected her suggestions for a quote marking the place where she was attacked.

Stanford law professor Michele Dauber proposed the plaque for the victim, who is a family friend and wishes to remain anonymous. The university rejected two quotes offered by the victim that were taken from the statement she read during the June 2016 sentencing of Brock Turner, Dauber said Monday.

Turner served three months in jail after a jury convicted him of sexually assaulting the young woman behind a trash bin during an on-campus 2015 fraternity party. Turner also had to register as a sex offender.

Stanford spokesman Ernest Miranda said the university agreed to suggestions made by the victim and Dauber to turn the on-campus site of the assault into a garden and “contemplative space.” But he said one of the victim’s proposed quotes was inappropriate and the other may upset other sexual assault victims.

Dauber said the university offered unacceptable alternatives, including a quote that reads: “I’m OK, everything’s OK.” She said the university’s suggested quote was an out-of-context reference to the victim trying to comfort her sister upon their first meeting after the assault.

Dauber said the decision to reject the quotes the victim suggested “was a very poor choice.”

Known in court as Emily Doe to protest her identity, the statement she read at Turner’s sentencing detailed the assault, the investigation and her reluctant participation in Turner’s trial and called for better treatment of sexual assault victims. The statement was widely circulated on social media and has served as a rallying point for sexual abuse victims.

The case itself also prompted nationwide protests and criticism of the justice system’s treatment of sexual assault victims.

Dauber leads a campaign to remove Santa Clara County Judge Aaron Persky from office because of his sentence of Turner. The campaign gathered enough signatures to place the recall election on the June ballot.

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This story has been corrected to reflect that Dauber is a family friend, not a representative, of the victim.